Ukraine pleads with allies to send tanks as fighting grinds on in east
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[January 05, 2023]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian and Russian troops battled in eastern regions
on Thursday as Kyiv tried to push back occupying forces, while President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged the West to provide his army with heavy tanks
to boost their firepower.
The Ukrainian military said the Russians were focused on an offensive in
the Bakhmut sector of the Donetsk region, but their attacks in the
Avdiivka and Kupiansk sectors were unsuccessful.
The governor of neighbouring Luhansk region, meanwhile, said Ukrainian
troops were recapturing areas there "step-by-step" but cautioned it was
"not happening fast".
Luhansk and Donetsk make up the Donbas region, Ukraine's industrial
heartland, parts of which were seized by Russian-backed proxies in 2014.
Russia declared Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions as
part of its territory in September after referendums condemned by
Ukraine and Western countries. Russia does not fully control any of the
four regions.
Bakhmut, which is now largely in ruins after months of battering by
Russian artillery, is important because the Russian leadership wants a
success to hold up to its public after a series of setbacks in the war.
It is located on a strategic supply line between the Donetsk and Luhansk
regions. Gaining control of the city, with a pre-war population of
70,000-80,000 that has shrunk to close to 10,000, could give Russia a
stepping stone to advance on two bigger cities - Kramatorsk and
Sloviansk.
Fighting has been particularly tough there, with commanders on both
sides describing it as a "meat grinder".
Ukraine's military said it estimated 800 Russian soldiers were killed in
the past day, mostly in fighting in Donetsk. The figure - which would
signify a huge loss of life for a single day - could not be
independently confirmed.
The Luhansk governor, Serhiy Haidai, said he expected fighting to
intensify across the eastern front as temperatures drop further and the
ground freezes.
"Then the opportunity to use heavy equipment will open up," he said.
In Moscow, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church,
called for both sides of the war to observe a truce for the Orthodox
Christmas over Friday and Saturday. Kyiv dismissed the move as a
propaganda from a figure it sees as supporting Putin's assault on
Ukraine.
HEAVY WEAPONS
A senior U.S. administration official also predicted a long road ahead
in the war that has now raged for nearly 11 months.
"The fighting is still quite hot (in Donetsk)...what we're seeing in
Bakhmut we should expect to see elsewhere along the front, that there
will be continued fighting in the coming months," the official said in
Washington on Wednesday.
In his evening video address on Wednesday, Zelenskiy urged Western
allies to provide his army with tanks and heavy weapons to combat the
Russian forces.
French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday his government would
send light AMX-10 RC armoured combat vehicles to help its war effort.
Zelenskiy thanked Macron but said: "There is no rational reason why
Ukraine has not yet been supplied with Western tanks."
The Ukrainian leader also said his troops outside Bakhmut were
inflicting numerous losses on their adversaries and Russia was building
up its forces in the region.
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U.S. servicemen walk past a Bradley
infantry fighting vehicle as they arrive for the joint U.S.-Georgian
exercise Noble Partner 2016 in Vaziani, Georgia, May 5, 2016.
REUTERS/David Mdzinarishvili
Russian air, missile and rocket attacks on Bakhmut and two other
cities in Donetsk - Kostiantynivka and Kurakhove - had caused an
unspecified number of civilian casualties, Ukraine's military said.
Russia denies targeting civilians in what it calls its special
military operation in Ukraine.
Luhansk governor Haidai, asked on national television about the
possibility of a Ukrainian counteroffensive in that region, said the
cities of Rubizhne and Sievierodonetsk had been destroyed by Russian
occupation forces and could no longer be used as strongholds.
"But we should not forget that there is also the defence line, which
they (Russian proxies) have been building since 2014 - the occupiers
have very fortified positions there. Therefore, it will not be easy
to liberate the Luhansk region," he said.
Russia was sending in extra troops, including conscripts, Haidai
added.
Yegeny Balitsky, the Russian-installed governor of the Russian-held
Zaporizhzhia region in the southeast, said Ukrainian artillery
killed five people and wounded 15 including four emergency workers,
Russia's TASS news agency reported.
Reuters could not independently verify battlefield accounts from
either side.
APPEAL FOR TANKS
As the war grinds on, the Kyiv government has repeatedly asked
Western allies for heavier fighting vehicles such as the Abrams and
German-made Leopard tanks.
U.S. President Joe Biden said on Wednesday the United States was
considering sending lighter Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine.
The Bradley has a powerful gun and has been a U.S. Army staple to
carry troops since the mid-1980s.
The United States is preparing another package of weapons, which
could be announced in coming days on top of about $21.3 billion in
security assistance so far to Ukraine.
The United States has increased the capability of the weapons it has
sent.
During a visit by Zelenskiy to Washington last month, the United
States pledged to send the Patriot missile system to repel Russian
missile and drone attacks.
Russia invaded on Feb. 24, citing threats to its security and a need
to protect Russian speakers. Ukraine and its allies accuse Russia of
an unprovoked war to seize territory.
Ukrainian economy ministry data on Thursday showed the country
suffered its sharpest economic decline in more than 30 years in 2022
because of the war - a 30.4% drop in gross domestic product. The
economy minister said foreign aid and the people's "unbreakable
spirit" helped prevent a worse scenario.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore and
Angus MacSwan; Editing by Stephen Coates and Alex Richardson)
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